WASHINGTON -- Obama administration officials said that even after Tuesday’s extended deadline, they will try to arrange coverage starting Jan. 1 for people who have had trouble getting through the government’s sometimes-balky enrollment website.

“Our highest priority is making sure that everyone who wants to enroll to have health care coverage by Jan. 1 is able to do so, particularly since consumers had a hard time accessing HealthCare.gov in October and November,” administration spokesperson Julie Bataille said in a statement. “As such, we are making sure we can provide information directly to consumers if and when they have questions about their particular situation, and if they are covered as of Jan. 1.”

“Consumers who tried to enroll prior to today and had problems with the system should contact the Marketplace call center for individual assistance” starting on Thursday, the statement said. Administration officials said they would work with insurance companies in an effort to keep people from going without coverage.

The stretching of the deadline directly affects consumers in 36 states who use the federal website to sign up for health coverage under the new healthcare law. Deadlines vary in the 14 states and the District of Columbia, which use their own websites.

The announcement was the latest move by the administration to deal with problems caused by the collapse of the website in October. The original deadline for consumers to sign up for coverage that would take effect Jan. 1 was Dec. 15. Last month, the White House extended that deadline to Dec. 23. On Monday that was extended until Tuesday.

How many people have signed up for coverage under the new law remains undetermined. President Obama said Friday that roughly 1 million Americans had signed up using either the federal or state websites. But the sites have seen heavy traffic over the weekend and through Tuesday.

Officials said HealthCare.gov had some 2 million site visits on Monday, and an additional 250,000 people contacted the system’s call centers. Because of heavy volume, 129,000 people were placed on the system’s waiting queue, in which people are contacted by e-mail when the website is less busy.

Several states have reported notable increases in enrollments in the last several days. In Colorado, for example, more than 5,000 people signed up Monday, bringing that state’s total to 43,000, officials said. New York reported an additional 25,000 people enrolled Monday and California has also reported late surges in enrollment.

Republicans have criticized the administration’s repeated deadline extensions, saying that the administration is stretching the law to make enrollment numbers in the new year look at large as possible. President Obama has said the changes are simply “common sense” efforts to make sure that people aren’t frozen out of coverage.

The political squabble has limited practical impact, however, since this month’s deadline is far from the last opportunity to sign up. Instead it's just the last chance to sign up for coverage that will take effect Jan. 1, which is primarly important to people with health problems who can’t afford a gap in coverage.

Open enrollment for health benefits under the law extends through the end of March. Consumers still need to pay their initial premiums in order to be covered. Insurance industry officials have said most health plans will accept coverage through Jan. 10.

WASHINGTON – The Obama administration moved Thursday to help tens of thousands of sick Americans who have struggled to enroll in health coverage for next year because of problems with the rollout of new insurance marketplaces created by the president’s health law.

WASHINGTON – Despite the problems plaguing the rollout of Obamacare, the “core of the law” is working and “more than half a million Americans have enrolled” in health plans so far in December, President Obama said Friday.